Wine of the Month Club | Haraszthy Cellars

Hey, welcome to the continuing wine makers series here at the Wine of the Month Club. And I’m really excited to have Val, and I even tried it, my name is 12-letter Hazarathy, Haraszthy.

Val: You butchered it.

Paul: I know, again.

Val: Haraszthy.

Paul: Haraszthy. Okay, I have it. Val Haraszthy. We brought some gorgeous zinfandels today, but more interesting than that, is the history of his family and the California wine business. So we’re just going to turn it over to Val ’cause he brought his son. He’s the great, great, great, great, half, half?

Val: He’s 3 greats, I’m only 2.

Paul: Yeah, well you look like a 2-greater, but okay.

Val: Thank you.

Paul: So tell us about you great, great, great grandfather.

Val: Well, my family is Hungarian. Haraszthy is a Hungarian name. And my great, great grandfather, Augustine, was an immigrant, came to America in 1842. And then in the late 1840s, he came to California, chasing gold like everybody else. He came across the Missouri, the Santa Fe trail which ended in San Diego, wasn’t for sure if it’s San Diego.

Paul: Oh really? Well that’s interesting. You didn’t tell me that part of work. He came to California, he came from North. And he wanted to bring wine to California.

Val: When he got to Sonoma, he realized the area was really just splendid viticultural area. And he built a winery there called Buenavista Winery, that was 1857, I think, considered to be the first winery in California.

Paul: I’ve tasted it many times. So 1850, that was a good vintage, you think or?

Val: Well I don’t know. Well there was no vinifera grape really around. I think it was called St. Croix and mission grape was kind of the grape being grown back there.

Paul: Mission was various right back then. So he decided he wanted vitis vinifera, which we’ve talked about on the shelf.

Val: Yes, because being from Europe and familiar with the wine grape which is vitis vinifera means that he convinced the legislature that they should commission him to go to Europe. And he did, for 1 year, Italy, Germany, France, everywhere, Croatia that he knew, went back to Hungary. Austria, he spent a year there with his son Arpad.

Paul: Arpad, I have an iPod. I’m sorry, Arpad.

Val: And they collected the vine. They collected over a hundred thousand cuttings, and then brought them back to San Francisco and distributed them to you know, [inaudible 2:28] and Charles Krug was a contemporary up there.

Paul: Oh well contemporary, current wine making too, right?

Val: Right, still around. Jim [inaudible 2:38] and Jeff are still at it. So yeah, he brought the vine back and planted it, and distributed it. That’s how the wine grape came to California.

Paul: Came to California.

Val: We’ve been out there ever since, making wine.

Paul: And then he went back to get his $14,000 expenses. Now this is what’s so interesting, he went back to the legislation, what happened?

Val: Well, this is 1861, right in the middle of the Civil War. And California was sitting on a fence about who were they going to side with, the South or the Union? And they asked Augustine who he would side you know, where his persuasions were. He was going with the South and they said, ‘Nope, nope, that;s not going to work.’ And then they basically just refused to pay him for his debt, and it was $14,000 that he spent in 1861.

Paul: That’s amazing. What an interesting story.

Val: It hurt.

Paul: Yeah, we’re just talking about vitis vinifera on our Facebook page. And the people are unaware what that is. So your great, great, great grandfather was responsible for bringing the wine grape, the wine stalk, to California, which is an amazing story.

Val: He’s usually referred to you know, with Augustine, there’s a lot of legend and story. Some of it is definitely fact. Yes, he did make this legendary epic trip to Europe in 1861 and brought all the grape back. And for this history, he is referred to as the Father of California Viticulture. That’s what’s his title.

Paul: That’s really exciting. Well that makes you the great, great Grandfather of Viticulture. No, I mean the great, great grandson.

Val: We specialize in zinfandel. We really hang our hat exclusively on zinfandel. And our belief is that zinfandel is a grape that exhibits distinct flavor and aroma, sensory evaluation type of flavors by virtue of where the grape is grown. So this one here is our Lodi Zinfandel.

Paul: It is packed in the nose with tons of flavors and fruit. And I like the spiciness from the Lodi area.

Val: I’ll tell you what we did. We tend not to blend. But you know, zinfandel has a couple of grapes that just merry very well into, I think first and foremost is probably Petite Sirah, secondly is Sirah. And you know, zinfandel can be a very tart wine, I think by nature, and it needs to kind of be brought into harmony. And with this wine, an 8% addition of, we actually had Napa Valley Sirah to this, which I think brought up the generosity of the wine if you made it a little bit of a noble brought or more dimensional wine.

Paul: So good! Really? That’s interesting. Tons of flavors, lots of berries, you don’t get that, you know. Sometimes Lodi Zinfandel [inaudible 5:33] almost too hot. Sort of hanging around the grape vine too long and gets a little overdone. This is really well balanced, excellent.

Val: Well you know, back in the day, over the top used to be considered sort of a compliment for a wine. I never bought that. Over the top means, it’s too much. And zinfandel you know, because of it’s uneven ripening, it’s a very difficult grape to get to full physiological ripeness. Even there, there’s always a few little green berries, within a cluster.

Paul: It’s just within the clusters.

Val: And that can throw a tart factor into the wine, which is why we manipulated this wine by adding that Sirah.

Paul: This is gorgeous. This is a zin again, but this is a Sonoma County one, it is distinctly different.

Val: Absolutely. There you go. You know, our statement that zinfandel exhibits these different flavor profiles by virtue of its appellation. It can’t be a cheap trick. People get this, and they get it when they taste through our wines. This is our Sonoma.

Paul: And this has changed since I opened it. [inaudible 6:48] You’re pretty lean with your job.

Val: I’ll tell you what we do. What we really love to do is to carry our wines around for 2 days. Tomorrow this wine, when you get some air on it, and the wine just opens up, it softens out. It’s just a more beautiful expression of the fruit.

Paul: Wow. This is really layered, lots of chocolate. I got a lot of things going on.

Val: You know, this is Dry Creek, this zinfandel. It doesn’t say Dry Creek on the label, but the predominant grape sourcing of this is the Saini Ranch in Dry Creek.

Paul: Gorgeous.

Val: And this is a 100% zinfandel.

Paul: Really? That’s amazing how much it’s changed just in the few moments that we’ve been together here. And the last, but not least is your Amador County. It is of course one of the great homes of zinfandel.

Val: Well Amador County you know is the oldest vineyard area in all of California. Jose Maria Amador. You know what Amador means? The loved one, the one who loves. And he was a Spaniard rancher who brought the vine with him in the early 1800s, and began to plant up there. And the oldest vineyard in all of California is called the Le Pierre Vineyard, and it’s in Amador County. Old head trained vines, nothing unwired, just the stalk coming out. But Amador is an appellation that delivers on rather intense fruitiness. The wines are just juicy.

Paul: Let’s say lots of fruit.

Val: If you like the big, juicy, fruit-forward cherry, type of flavor profiles in wine, you’re going to like Amador.

Paul: All of these wines, seem to me completely represent where they’re from, which is a great testimony to the great [inaudible 8:49].

Val: Thank you. We’re doing our job right if you say that.

Paul: You’re welcome, but it is what it is.

Val: That’s what we try to do. That’s what we strive for.

Paul: Because we tasted some of your wines and they’re just kind of ‘What?’ and that’s what happens when… The nose and the berries and the fruitiness, it’s just amazing.

Val: Ooh this is tasting pretty good today.

Paul: Well, that was really, really fun to taste through your wines. And we’ve had some before I think you got a product line that we’ve tasted but I’m not [inaudible 9:08] chance to taste this, I don’t think David. No, I’m kidding, He’s brought him for you. It’s a pleasure having you.